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Management Controls In Mining - Modern Methods Need Wider AcceptanceBy Theodore Barry
The task of developing controls in the mining and manufacturing industries to give them a tighter grip on operating costs has afforded this author an interesting vantage point for observing certain pr
Jan 11, 1962
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Distribution of Lead Impurity in a Copper-refining Furnace BathBy Walter Scott
THE removal of lead by fire refining methods from copper of electrolytic quality is growing in importance. Particularly is this true of the refining of secondary copper and copper cathodes obtained fr
Jan 1, 1930
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Blast-Furnace SlagsBy Kenneth Robertson
THERE is probably less known of this subject than of any other connected with the metallurgy of iron. In all the books that treat of this matter, there ore given analyses of slags, their chemical form
Jan 1, 1873
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Symposium On Cyclones – Use Of Cyclones In The Grinding Of TaconiteBy Fred D. DeVaney
MINNESOTA taconites are extremely hard, and fine grinding is required to produce an acceptable concentrate. To reduce grinding costs, waste material is rejected by magnetic separators as soon as it is
Jan 8, 1957
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Modernization of Bunker Hill Presintering PracticesBy Donald Ingvoldstad, Harold E. Lee
At Bunker Hill the original charge storage and preparation system was installed in 1917 to accommodate lead-silver gravity mill products. Only minor tonnages of wet fines such as vanner and flotation
Oct 1, 1956
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The Role And Credibility Of Computational Methods In Engineering Rock MechanicsBy B. H. G. Brady, C. M. St. John
Computational schemes for analysis of rock mass response to excavation, loading and other imposed changes, are employed pervasively in rock mechanics practice. Applications range in complexity from de
Jan 1, 1982
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Amalgamation TestsBy W. J. Sharwood
(San Francisco Meeting, September. 1915) THE assay or estimation of the total gold content of an ore presents little difficulty, when circumstances permit of securing a thoroughly representative samp
Jan 8, 1915
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Mining Engineering Notebook – Cage to Hoisting Engineer – Emergency CommunicationBy W. A. Boyer, A. W. Beck
At the Morning mine of American Smelting & Refining Co. it was particularly important that there be a means of signaling the engineer from the moving cage in the shaft. Because of the shifting ground
Sep 1, 1955
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The Procedure And Method Of Making The Mirrors That Are Commonly Called Spheres.SINCE you have asked me many times in particular how those mirrors are made that are commonly called spheres,* and even though I have told you at other times, I do not wish to omit writing of it here
Jan 1, 1942
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Application Of Geological Science At The Morenci Branch, Phelps Dodge CorporationBy F. J. Menzer, E. M. Schern
The Morenci/Metcalf porphyry copper mining operation, located in southeastern Arizona, currently processes approximately 91,000 tonnes of ore per day and has copper ore reserves estimated to be in exc
Jan 1, 1984
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Halifax Paper - The Geology of Natural GasBy Charles A. Ashburner
The existence of natural gas-springs in Pennsylvania and the adjoining States west of the crest of the Allegheny Mountains was known to the earliest settlers. Possibly the first gas obtained from a we
Jan 1, 1886
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The 1970 Jackling Award Lecture - Copper Resources In 1970By J. David Lowell
On a low desert ridge six miles south of Cairo lie the remains of the world's earliest known mining town, Maadi of predynastic Egypt. Copper artifacts, including ingots and an ax head which was s
Jan 1, 1970
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Cationic Flotation Of Oxides And SilicatesBy Ross W. Smith, Salim Akhtar
INTRODUCTION Flotation of oxide minerals, particularly silicates, with cationic collectors differs substantially from classic flotation of sulfide minerals using sulfhydryl collectors. In the case
Jan 1, 1976
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Embrittlement Of Silver By Oxygen And HydrogenBy D. L. Martin, E. R. Parker
DURING the heat-treatment of silver specimens for tensile tests it was observed that the bars blistered and became brittle when heated in a hydrogen atmosphere. [ ] To check this unexpected result,
Jan 1, 1943
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Papers - Concentration - Nature of the Adsorption of Fatty Acids from Organic Solvents by Inorganic Lead Compounds (Mining Technology, May 1941.) (with discussion)By Dwight L. Baker, Alexander Knoll
The work herein reported shows that galena in certain organic solutions of fatty acids becomes coated with lead soaps, and that this coating is not only highly water-repellent but is also repellent to
Jan 1, 1943
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Papers - Concentration - Nature of the Adsorption of Fatty Acids from Organic Solvents by Inorganic Lead Compounds (Mining Technology, May 1941.) (with discussion)By Alexander Knoll, Dwight L. Baker
The work herein reported shows that galena in certain organic solutions of fatty acids becomes coated with lead soaps, and that this coating is not only highly water-repellent but is also repellent to
Jan 1, 1943
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Institute of Metals Division - High Speed Quenching DilatometerBy R. H. Raring, F. E. Martin
A high speed gas quenching dilatometer useful in studying phase transformations in low alloy steels is described. Changes in specimen length are measured by means of an electrical micrometer tube. The
Jan 1, 1957
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Agglomeration Flotation Of Manganese OreBy Ellis H. Gates
BENEFICIATION of the manganese oxide ores at Three Kids Mine near Henderson, Nev., has evolved over a period of years. Commercial application of the process is on a secure basis, and an effective work
Jan 12, 1957
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Phosphorite Deposits Near Patos de Minas, - Minas Gerais, Brazil (387deef7-efdb-4f8c-964c-ec3f542a32b2)By James B. Cathcart
Marine phosphorite deposits occur in Braxil, in the Bambui Group of late Precambrian or Early Cambrian age. The phosphorite is laminated, isoclinally folded, and is composed of black, elongated apatit
Jan 1, 1979
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The Mica Veins of North CarolinaBy W. C. Kerr
A BRIEF sketch only is here intended, with a few illustrations, in order to give a general notion of the character and structure of these veins. I have stated elsewhere, several years ago, that these
Jan 1, 1880